Bode Miller focused on winning gold at Winter Olympic Games in Sochi

Bode Miller failed to complete his last race before the Winter Olympics, a giant slalom in St Moritz at the weekend, but the American made it clear his ambitions remained high for this month's Sochi Games.

"I'm ready, my skiing in general is pretty solid," said the 36-year-old World Cup veteran, who will be competing at his fifth Winter Games in Russia.

"It was the idea to keep getting stronger and come to the Olympics ready to win in every race,"

Miller, who missed the entire 2012/13 season to treat lingering knee problems, has staged a highly successful comeback campaign, standing on the podium three times in three different events.

One of the most versatile talents of his generation, he has already collected five medals, including one gold, since his Olympic debut in Nagano in 1998 and will defend his super-combined crown in Rosa Khutor in Sochi.

The once maverick poster boy of alpine skiing has now matured and can claim to be the only skier of such high profile to have taken part in that many Games.

"It seems like a long time ago. It goes by very quickly," Miller said of his Olympic debut in 1998.

"I wasn't thinking much beyond that day. When you're so young you have infinite possibilities ahead of you. Some 400 races or so later, I'm a very different person now."

Miller has already competed in all five alpine skiing disciplines at the Olympics and will enter at least four in Sochi, with the slalom likely to make way having been a weak event in recent seasons.

It depends on what you bring to the Olympics and what the Olympics is on its own. Every time you go, it's a unique event.

Bode Miller

"Slalom is still a mystery but that's the way slalom is," he said.

Miller's most successful Games came in Vancouver four years ago where he claimed three medals but experience has taught Miller not to have any special expectations.

"We'll have to see. It's different each time you go," he said.

"It depends on what you bring to the Olympics and what the Olympics is on its own. Every time you go, it's a unique event.

"The hill looks great and there have been concerns about the snow but they have snow. The course suits me well, it's long, a bit like Wengen (in Switzerland) maybe. It's going be a matter of how the conditions hold up but I'm ready."

Miller's most recent performances were far from encouraging, however, as he failed to finish his last three races, but he insists weather conditions were to blame rather than his form.

"The World Cup has been a mess this year I hope the Olympics bring something new in regards to the conditions," he said.